The first ⅓ is the US base salary. This segment will be the same for someone in an expensive context vs a less expensive context. This segment factors in that no matter where you live there are aspects of being an American that will be the same across the board. |
The second ⅓ is the cost of living adjustment (COLA). We take ⅓ of your salary and multiply by a COLA percentage. This segment will be considerably higher for someone going to an expensive context and considerably lower for someone going to a less expensive location. This number is based on 3 cost of living websites that we average out and then round up.
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The last ⅓ is for the actual cost of housing and utilities that the Intl Worker will be paying. This helps account for drastic housing differences across locations and the differing needs of a family unit. This is also in line with the typical American budget, in which Housing is 30-35% of an American’s budget. |
Examples:So let’s look at an example of a new Reliant International Worker, who is single, and has an overseas job that is equivalent to a Reliant US Worker that would make $30,000/year or $2,500/monthly in the US. The table shows the monthly salary breakdown. Below the table you’ll see an explanation of each column and line: Single Person | US (100% COLA) | Vietnam (50% COLA) | Japan (150% COLA) | US Base | $833 | $833 | $833 | COLA | $833 | $417 | $1,250 | Housing | $833 | $1,000 | $1,250 | Gross Salary | $2,500 | $2,250 | $3,333 |
- In the first column you see the ⅓ categories.
- In the second column you can see the breakdown of those 3 categories for the US salary (annually).
- In the third column you see an example of Vietnam, which has a lower cost of living than the US:
- US Base ⅓ Segment - On the first line you see that their US salary base segment of the salary is the same, because this will stay the same no matter where they are in the world.
- Cost of Living Adjustment ⅓ Segment - In the second line you see the cost of living adjustment segment. Vietnam is a 50% COLA adjustment, so instead of that being $833 it’s $417 for this segment.
- Housing ⅓ Segment - In the third line you see the actual housing cost segment. In Vietnam, housing is oddly expensive, so it’s $1,000 for this segment instead of $833.
- In the fourth column you see an example of Japan, one of the more expensive countries we work in.
- On the first line you see that their US salary base segment of the salary is the same, because this will stay the same no matter where they are in the world.
- In the second line you see the cost of living adjustment segment. Japan is a 150% COLA adjustment, so instead of that being $833 it’s a $1,250 for this segment.
- In the third line you see the actual housing cost segment. In Japan, the actual housing cost is $1,250, so for this segment we are putting $1,250 towards salary instead of $833 as we would in the US.
All this comes to a different total for each location. Same type of person, same tenure, same type of job, but different total because of the Cost of Living and housing costs in that actual location. |
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For a married couples, we determine a household salary, based on individual staff levels, COLA, and joint housing costs. In Table 2, Spouse 1 would make $36,000 in the US based on staff level and Spouse 2 would make $54,000 in the US based on staff level. This is a combined annual salary of 90,000, or $7500 per month.
Household Salary Total | US Salary (100% COLA) | Vietnam Salary (50% COLA) | Japan Salary (150% COLA) | US Base | $2,500 | $2,500 | $2,500 | COLA | $2,500 | $1,250 | $3,750 | Housing | $2,500 | $2,000 | $3,000 | Totals | $7,500 | $5,750 | $9,250 |
We will divide the household salary based on staff level. If both spouses are at the same level, the split is 50/50. In this case, Spouse 1's staff level accounts for 40% of the base salary, and Spouse 2's staff level accounts for 60%. Their salary would be split 40/60. If they were living in Japan, Spouse 1 would receive $3700 and Spouse 2 would receive $5,550. |
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